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Archive 2025 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey

  
 
Stefan Official
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p.1 #1 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


spent an entire night exploring Frankfurt, capturing the city’s unique atmosphere through my lens. From glowing skyscrapers to quiet streets, this series showcases the magic of the city after dark.

Some of my photos have up to 250 MP, and the links to the full-resolution versions can be found in the description on Flickr. Flickr itself limits in-browser viewing to 20 MP, but the full-resolution downloads are available.

Let me know what you think—I’d love to hear your impressions!


Frankfurt Illuminated: A Captivating Skyline Symphony – 250 Megapixel Masterpiece by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


Frankfurt Central Station in Full Glory: A 250-Megapixel Masterpiece by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


Capturing the Pulse in 61MP: Frankfurt’s Skyline from Above by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


Ascending Infinity – The Grand Tower’s Timeless Elegance by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


The Future Arrives at Westend Subway Station I – Frankfurt, Germany by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


Golden Nights – Frankfurt Glowing in the Darkness (Holbeinsteg Bridge) by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


🚇 Sunken Subway Station Bockenheimer Warte – Frankfurt at Night by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


Frankfurt by Night: Europe’s Most Underrated Skyline by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


The Future Rises at Westend Subway Station II – Frankfurt, Germany by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr


Bockenheimer Warte – The Symmetric Illusion | Frankfurt Subway by Stefan Zimmermann Official, auf Flickr



Mar 05, 2025 at 02:47 PM
Bill Gass
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p.1 #2 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


WOW...Outstanding, Beautiful, Incredible, love the sunken subway and the Illusion...The Illusion has me tripin still and the first 3 pictures are beautiful...Very nice work.


Mar 05, 2025 at 03:05 PM
Bill Gass
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p.1 #3 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Really love your Astronomy pictures as well.


Mar 05, 2025 at 03:13 PM
JWilsonphoto
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p.1 #4 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Beautiful work Stefan! So how did you create the 250MP files?


Mar 05, 2025 at 05:43 PM
anthonysemone
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p.1 #5 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Stefan, Einfach ausgezeichnet!!!!!! Freut mich hier ihre bekannshaft gemacht zu haben. Willkommen (Entschuldigen Sie mir, Bitte. Es ist eine sehr lange Zeit als Ich Deutsch studiert hab'.)


Mar 05, 2025 at 07:17 PM
Mike TT
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p.1 #6 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Captivating. My favorite is the skyline #1 but they are all great.


Mar 05, 2025 at 08:44 PM
Stefan Official
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p.1 #7 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


many thanks 😊

I signed up for this forum because of my interest in Milky Way photography. In the coming months, I plan to do a lot in this area and am looking for an exchange of ideas. Especially because the excellent Benro Polaris plays only a minor role in astrophotography, and many users often struggle with it. This is often due to a lack of knowledge, and since there is very little documentation available, it can be quite challenging.

I plan to share more about this in the future, but it will take some time.

Yes, you can probably tell from my long posts that I’m very detail-oriented and highly interested in technology. That can sometimes be a bit exhausting – sorry! 😅

@anthonysemone, I understand your German very well! Thank you. Unfortunately, my English isn’t great, but thanks to AI, it’s working quite well now. If my text sounds a bit strange at times, it's because English isn’t my native language. But I’m looking forward to exchanging ideas – and new technologies are making that easier than ever!

I spent a total of 18 hours on a photo tour at -3°C.
Much of it was carefully planned—otherwise, this wouldn't have been possible.
Time, weather, location, parking—nothing was left to chance.

These are all subjects I photographed about 25 years ago, and I wanted to capture them again using modern technology. Back then, there was no Google Maps, making planning much more difficult.

Taking the first two 250 MP photos using the Pixel Shift technique was anything but easy. However, for these two subjects, I think the effort was absolutely worth it.
With Pixel Shift, nothing can move: all 16 individual exposures must be shifted precisely by one pixel each. Not only must the subject itself remain completely still, but even the bridge where my camera was placed had to be motionless.

This turned out to be a real challenge. Every passing train caused vibrations that ruined the shot. I endured nearly three hours in freezing -3°C temperatures on that bridge. There was hardly a single minute without a train passing by. At times, trains even stopped right in front of my camera or moved past extremely slowly, making yet another Pixel Shift series useless.

At one point, the police even checked on me. And as if that wasn’t enough, my battery died at one of the few good moments. I cursed a lot. 😅

It was three hours of frustration, but in the end, I managed to capture two Pixel Shift shots.

What makes Pixel Shift so special?
With the Sony A7R V, the sensor is shifted precisely 16 times by one pixel row per step. This doesn’t just increase resolution—it also dramatically improves color accuracy. Each pixel captures all three primary colors, unlike the Bayer matrix, which interpolates colors from neighboring pixels.

Additionally, this technique almost completely eliminates noise and significantly increases dynamic range.

Sony’s software can combine the 16 individual shots into a single 241 MP RAW file, which ends up being about 1.8 GB in size. The merging process itself is relatively quick. However, Sony’s software for processing these files was terrible—barely usable. Fortunately, Lightroom has supported these special RAW files for several months now, and the results are fantastic. The difference compared to Sony’s software is night and day. The real magic of these images only comes to life during the editing process.

Pixel Shift doesn’t just improve resolution—it also enhances color fidelity. It feels like a veil has been lifted from the image.

I also took the first Frankfurt photo in this series using a traditional exposure bracketing method, but it doesn’t look nearly as crystal clear as the Pixel Shift version.

Is it worth the effort?
In my opinion, Pixel Shift is only worth it for very special subjects. I wouldn’t use it all the time—the effort is just too high since absolutely nothing can move.

Long exposures help to some extent by averaging out minor changes, but Pixel Shift will never be a practical everyday technique. Still, it’s great to have it as an option for extraordinary shots—if you’re aware of the effort involved.



Mar 06, 2025 at 01:10 AM
douter
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p.1 #8 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Some really fine nighttime captures, Stefan!
Douglas



Mar 06, 2025 at 06:52 AM
Bill Gass
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p.1 #9 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


I wonder how similar that is compared to Canons IBIS High Resolution 400MP Files, been wanting to try this for a project I'm working on but haven't tried it yet.
.
Thanks for your explanations-



Mar 06, 2025 at 09:06 AM
Stefan Official
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p.1 #10 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


I haven’t kept up with Canon for a while. I used to be a Canon user and really liked the system, but after a long time, I just wanted to try something different and switched to Sony.

As far as I know, Canon’s Pixel Shift works entirely in-camera and only saves JPEGs, whereas Sony allows RAW files. In the past, Canon had issues with color resolution, especially with reds. I’m not sure if that’s still the case, but I believe it is.

Each manufacturer takes a different approach to Pixel Shift—probably due to patents that they have to work around



Mar 06, 2025 at 10:44 AM
Danpbphoto
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p.1 #11 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Welcome Stefan!
You have introduced yourself quite well here! Your compostions are extremely well composed and processed. I saw no glaring light artifacts, no diversions of the eye to an OOF artifact, great texture, great detail, superb exposures!
You will be a welcome addition to FM!
Bis später. Mehr posten!
Dan



Mar 06, 2025 at 11:08 AM
Odyssey1812
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p.1 #12 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Welcome Stefan! All I can say is wow! Amazing photos. I can't wait to see your astrophotography photos!

Wing.



Mar 06, 2025 at 02:17 PM
srkbar
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p.1 #13 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Stefan, these are some incredibly amazing photos. Love them all
Thanks for sharing!.



Mar 06, 2025 at 02:41 PM
skirk
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p.1 #14 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Frankfurt Central Station image is nothing short of amazing. Very impressive


Mar 06, 2025 at 09:25 PM
drbailey
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p.1 #15 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


This set of photos are completely gobsmacking ! So incredibly well done. The very reason I look at photos here, I can’t thank you enough for sharing.


Mar 06, 2025 at 09:45 PM
jamie3000
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p.1 #16 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Fantastic set!
Did you use ND filter with super long exposure? Or No ND filters used?



Mar 07, 2025 at 12:27 AM
Stefan Official
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p.1 #17 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Many thanks again for accepting me into the forum! I’m happy to share my knowledge—I’ve been photographing for so long. I even remember the early days of Fred Miranda and followed the forum for a long time, though only as a silent reader. Time really flies! But now I thought it was time to finally say hello, haha. 🙂

I have no secrets and I’m happy to help. Night photography is my passion. It’s how I started photography, and for a long time, I focused exclusively on it. Later, I spent over 15 years exploring other areas, particularly video. But now, I just want to do what I truly enjoy and have returned to my roots.

Night photography brings everything together: patience, endurance, deep technical understanding, and extensive post-processing experience. It challenges you in many ways, and that’s exactly what I love about it. It was time for me to focus on what I want to express through photography.

I don’t use ND filters. Almost all my night shots are created as exposure brackets—multiple images taken at different brightness levels and later combined into one. A single photo from a full-frame sensor is already excellent, but by using only the optimal part of an exposure—the so-called sweet spot—you can push image quality even further. This helps avoid color degradation, loss of details, and weak micro-contrasts in the darkest and brightest areas of a single shot.

That’s why I shoot exposure brackets, capturing each brightness level of the scene in its optimal range. In Lightroom, merging exposure brackets into HDR is straightforward. In my recent photos, I’ve listed the various exposure times I used. A good approach is to double the exposure time each step, e.g., starting with 3 seconds, then 6, 12, 24 seconds, and so on. Lightroom handles the rest. If two images happen to have the same exposure time, it doesn’t matter—Lightroom compensates. No need to overcomplicate things; what matters is covering a wide range of exposures.

Why HDR-RAW is the best option – even for SDR monitors
Lightroom allows you to generate an HDR-RAW file from an exposure bracket. These are real HDR-RAWs with an extremely high dynamic range—perfect and effortless. They contain significantly more data than a single RAW image.

A key advantage: These HDR-RAWs work just as well for SDR (Standard Dynamic Range) output as they do for HDR!

When exporting for SDR, all the extra dynamic range is used to create a natural-looking image with perfect highlights, shadows, and color accuracy. Unlike traditional HDR methods that require artificial tone mapping to fit into SDR, HDR-RAW preserves all details natively.

This means you get the best possible SDR image today, while keeping the option open to export full HDR versions in the future. Whether displayed on an SDR or HDR monitor, HDR-RAWs always deliver the optimal image quality—without any compromises.

SDR vs. HDR – What’s the difference?
SDR (Standard Dynamic Range) describes the monitors and TVs that have been used for decades. Movies and photos are typically optimized for 100 nits brightness, ideal for comfortable viewing in dim lighting. This was the standard for a long time because brighter displays didn’t exist.

True HDR starts at 1000 nits brightness, as used in HDR10+ or Dolby Vision. This allows lights—car headlights, city lights, reflections—to appear much more realistic, almost like in real life.

Many assume they can just increase their monitor’s brightness to get HDR, but that’s not how it works. A normal SDR display brightens the entire image when you raise brightness. With true HDR at 1000 nits, only the brightest parts—lamps, headlights, candles, laser beams—become significantly brighter, while the rest of the image remains at a natural SDR brightness.

An SDR photo can only suggest a glowing lamp—it doesn’t truly shine. But on an HDR monitor with 1000 nits, the lamp actually emits light, just like in real life. This is a game-changer!

The future of HDR in photography
For years, I’ve worked with calibrated HDR monitors capable of at least 1400 nits. Lightroom allows direct HDR output, and many modern smartphones and tablets already support HDR—though many users aren’t even aware of it. Future displays will all have HDR support.

To this day, no major photo platform supports HDR formats like AVIF or JPEG XL. YouTube has supported HDR videos for years, yet no photo-sharing platform offers HDR images.

I’ve even sent proposals to Flickr on how to implement HDR support for the web with minimal effort. The change would only take a few hours! Once HDR is established, photos could be automatically detected and displayed in full 1000-nit brightness.

With exposure brackets in Lightroom, you can create real HDR-RAWs—the perfect format for both SDR and HDR displays. No JPEGs, no TIFFs—just full RAW with maximum dynamic range for both worlds. And best of all: These HDR-RAWs are an investment in the future. As soon as HDR support arrives on the web, all existing HDR-RAWs can be exported to AVIF or JPEG XL and used immediately.

Simply enable HDR in Lightroom, raise the highlights slightly, and be amazed at how your images transform. With this, highlights shift from 100 nits to 1000 nits—producing breathtaking results.

Why Lightroom is the best choice for HDR workflows
Many HDR programs create fake HDR effects rather than true HDR files. Most of them don’t retain RAW data, which limits post-processing flexibility. Lightroom, on the other hand, generates true HDR-RAW files, keeping all the advantages of RAW editing.

If you’re working towards an HDR future, it makes sense to future-proof your workflow now. Anyone shooting exposure brackets today should ensure they can fully utilize HDR displays when they become the new standard.

Sorry for the long post, but I wanted to share what I’ve learned. Photography is about pushing boundaries, exploring new methods, and continuously improving. That’s what makes it so much fun!

Is there a dedicated thread for night photography, or do people post their photos in separate threads?
A lot of things are still new to me here.
Or should I just carry on here? Even if it doesn't always have to do with Frankfurt.


Many thanks again for accepting me into the forum!
Unfortunately, as a new user, I can currently only write two posts per day—a bit limiting, but I’ll make the most of it. 😊

"Every new day is a new chance to do what makes you happy."



Mar 07, 2025 at 06:25 AM
bmike-vt
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p.1 #18 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Hallo aus der Schweiz. Ihre Fotos von Frankfurt sind ausgezeichnet. Sehr, sehr schön.


Mar 07, 2025 at 07:36 AM
Danpbphoto
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p.1 #19 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Stefan Official wrote:
Is there a dedicated thread for night photography, or do people post their photos in separate threads?
A lot of things are still new to me here.
Or should I just carry on here? Even if it doesn't always have to do with Frankfurt.

Many thanks again for accepting me into the forum!
Unfortunately, as a new user, I can currently only write two posts per day—a bit limiting, but I’ll make the most of it. 😊

"Every new day is a new chance to do what makes you happy."


No dedicated thread for night photography! Post to the forum that best describes that composition. Most FM'rs allow some pro-active members leeway in what forum they post in.

If you keep posting in the wrong forum, you will be kindly directed to the possible correct one. You can post to multiple forums..bottom left drop down box......then you can't go wrong!

With your great photography, posting 2 aday should NOT be an issue....

My great great grandparents on my father's side fled Germany before WWI..they were bakers, bankers and hatters...Hint Hint my last name(bread)!

Again welcome!!
Dan



Mar 07, 2025 at 11:21 AM
keepclicking
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p.1 #20 · One Night in Frankfurt, Germany – 250 MP Night Photography Journey


Stefan, welcome to FM
late to the party what an incredible set! Appreciate all the tech details. I love reading the details behind the photos as it connects me as a viewer to your images. Very well done and excellent PP



Mar 07, 2025 at 12:40 PM
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